In this interview, poet and ecologist Madhur Anand discusses her collection of poetry, A New Index for Predicting Catastrophes, with Alec Follett. She considers the poetic potential of scientific language as well as other topics related to her poetry and her research including field guides, biodiversity, and socio-ecological relationships
In 2017, I experienced the ARTS Pre- Conference of the Canadian Society for Studies in Education as ...
A nonfiction work that explores widow\u27s walks in a time of climate change on the coasts. This pie...
Being one of the prominent issues of the present fast growing technical world, eco-criticism has ini...
This review explores Madhur Anand’s recent poetry collection from several points of view. One involv...
To mark the tenth anniversary of The Goose, we asked prominent ecologically-minded scholars, writers...
Student’s name omitted writes poems informed by the restorative vigor of nature, the sheer beauty of...
To accompany the posthumous publication of Sylvia Bowerbank’s personal essay “Sitting in the Bush, O...
In this interview with Dr. Swarnalatha Rangarajan, a well known Indian ecocritic and a pioneer of In...
Review of Alejandro Frid\u27s A World for My Daughter: An Ecologist’s Search for Optimism
This thesis is in two parts, a book of literary essays titled Abundance: Nature in Recovery (80%) ex...
Seemingly, science and literature don't have anything in common. Actually, fields such as medicine a...
This paper argues that exposures through literature to human fragility and vulnerability, which are ...
Review of Environmental Humanities: Voices from the Anthropocene by Serpil Oppermann and Serenella I...
Dr CA Cranston was interviewed on the subject of ecocriticism, ecology, and the environment, by OSLE...
Rebekah A. Taylor reviews Eco-Joyce: The Environmental Imagination of James Joyce edited by Robert B...
In 2017, I experienced the ARTS Pre- Conference of the Canadian Society for Studies in Education as ...
A nonfiction work that explores widow\u27s walks in a time of climate change on the coasts. This pie...
Being one of the prominent issues of the present fast growing technical world, eco-criticism has ini...
This review explores Madhur Anand’s recent poetry collection from several points of view. One involv...
To mark the tenth anniversary of The Goose, we asked prominent ecologically-minded scholars, writers...
Student’s name omitted writes poems informed by the restorative vigor of nature, the sheer beauty of...
To accompany the posthumous publication of Sylvia Bowerbank’s personal essay “Sitting in the Bush, O...
In this interview with Dr. Swarnalatha Rangarajan, a well known Indian ecocritic and a pioneer of In...
Review of Alejandro Frid\u27s A World for My Daughter: An Ecologist’s Search for Optimism
This thesis is in two parts, a book of literary essays titled Abundance: Nature in Recovery (80%) ex...
Seemingly, science and literature don't have anything in common. Actually, fields such as medicine a...
This paper argues that exposures through literature to human fragility and vulnerability, which are ...
Review of Environmental Humanities: Voices from the Anthropocene by Serpil Oppermann and Serenella I...
Dr CA Cranston was interviewed on the subject of ecocriticism, ecology, and the environment, by OSLE...
Rebekah A. Taylor reviews Eco-Joyce: The Environmental Imagination of James Joyce edited by Robert B...
In 2017, I experienced the ARTS Pre- Conference of the Canadian Society for Studies in Education as ...
A nonfiction work that explores widow\u27s walks in a time of climate change on the coasts. This pie...
Being one of the prominent issues of the present fast growing technical world, eco-criticism has ini...